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NEWS:
Women's Campaign School at Yale
University
Elects New President and
Directors
New Haven, Conn. - The Women's Campaign School (WCS) at Yale
University, a non-profit, non-partisan political leadership training
program expressly for women, announces the election of Maine resident
and WCS board member Martha Sterling-Golden as president of the School.
WCS is a summer program hosted at Yale by Yale Law School.
"This board represents decades of successful political and non-profit
management experience, and it is a profound honor to be entrusted with
their good faith," Sterling-Golden commented.
"The challenge of leadership is finding a respectable and ethical way
to move your agenda while preserving professional comity," said
Sterling-Golden, who is a 1995 alumna. "Unfortunately, in real life not
everyone on your committee will be a member of your party or agree with
you on the issue; you have to bring competing ideas together."
"We bring women to New Haven from different national, cultural and
political backgrounds to learn to work together. . . leaving aside our
personal political conflicts," she added.
Sterling-Golden is a former elected representative to the Maine
Democratic State Committee, and she serves on the advisory board of the
Maine chapter of the national Democratic women's training program
Emerge America. She has a background in political campaign work in
addition to decades of political activism. Sterling-Golden is a former
member of the board of the Maine Women's Lobby and was appointed to the
state Human Resources Development and Jobs councils.
Currently, Sterling-Golden is major gifts manager for Maine Coast
Heritage Trust, the state's largest non-profit conservation
organization, which has just completed a successful $100,000,000
capital campaign.
The School also elected the following new officers and board members:
Deb Sofield, an international public speaking consultant and
businesswoman, was elected first vice-president. Sofield is a
Greenville, South Carolina, City Council member and travels abroad for
the American Council of Young Political Leaders, a bipartisan,
non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C.
Patricia Russo, former chair of the Connecticut Permanent Commission on
the Status of Women, is second vice-president. She is currently
vice-president of the Foundation for Connecticut Women and is a member
of the Council of Women's Health Research at Yale, and former board
member of the National Association of Commissions for Women.
Arlene Violet of Rhode Island is the new board secretary. A popular
public affairs radio host, columnist and practicing
attorney, Violet was the first woman to be elected a state attorney
general in the United States.
Laurel J. Anderson, project manager for United Way of Connecticut and
chair of the Connecticut chapter of the American Association of
University Women State Legal Advocacy Fund, was re-elected to a second
term as treasurer of the board.
New board members include editorial columnist Samar Rashdan al-Roomi,
Kuwait University, founder of the Society for Study and Training in
Leadership Development in Kuwait; Angela Faulkner of the marketing and
political consulting firm Faulkner Strategies; Pamela Stark, director
of development at the Child Guidance Center of Mid-Fairfield County,
Connecticut, and formerly of the Volunteer Consulting Group in
Manhattan; and Shawnta Walcott, formerly with Zogby International, now
president of Ariel & Ethan, LLC - a non-partisan independent
polling firm based in Bethesda, Maryland. These members join Mary Ann
O'Connor of
Connecticut and Lauren K. Day of New Jersey, who are past co-presidents
of WCS; political consultant Nancy Bocskor, Virginia; U. S.
Representative Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona; Tanya Meck, founder of MB
Associates, a political and non-profit consulting group; Beth Bird
Pocker, Esq., activist, New York; and Prof. Kate Stith,
Yale Law School, Connecticut.
Founded in 1993 by Yale Associate Fellow Andree Brooks, an author and
journalist, WCS is one of a handful of non-partisan, non-issues-based
training programs in the country. It is a 60-hour immersion program
covering every facet of campaign training and political leadership
preparation. The faculty is comprised of the nation's top political
talent from a broad political spectrum, providing the best quality of
training and real-world leadership experience.
The 2006 summer session brought women to WCS from 16 states, from Maine
to Hawaii, and from nine countries. The School's primary program is the
five-day annual summer session which is hosted at Yale Law School each
July. For more information: http://www.wcsyale.org.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 12, 2007
CAMPAIGNS
& ELECTIONS MAGAZINE
T
he
Changing Global Face of Politics:
Training tomorrow's female leaders
January 2007
By Nancy Bocskor
Dr.
Samar Rashdan al-Roomi's husband was taken from their Kuwait City home
during the Iraqi invasion in 1991; she never heard from him again. She
was left with two sons to raise, so she finished her education and
became a communications professor at the Kuwait University College for
Women. Then she traveled to the United States to attend the Women's
Campaign School at Yale's summer program in the hopes of educating
herself and others about how to run for office.
When Kuwait granted women suffrage in 2005, al-Roomi decided to
learn as much as possible about the campaign process by attending WCS.
After the program she returned home to form a non-governmental
organization, the Kuwait Center for Research and Training in Leadership
Development, to train Kuwaiti college women to participate in their
national electoral process. Now a columnist for the Arab Times,
al-Roomi writes about women in the political process. She recently
wrote two major pieces: "Arab Women as Transformational Leaders" and
"Kuwaiti Women's use of Blogs for Political Empowerment."
Ambassador Rev. Princess Elizabeth Ogbon-Day is a National
Party of Nigeria candidate for President of that country. She was
Nigeria's first woman ambassador, and is a social-justice politician.
She came to WCS to find the best information available in the most
compact setting. These two women are visionaries in their countries and
are working to achieve equality in politics. In order to do this, they
came to the United States to attend one of the few training programs
dedicated to them and women across the world.
The Women's Campaign School at Yale, founded in 1993, attracts women
from the United States and around the world "who know that leadership
ultimately requires the ability to work with people who have different
opinions," Martha Sterling-Golden, president of the campaign school,
said.
Their summer session, sixty hours over
five days, is an intense schedule. But participants are committed to
increasing the number of women in government. This year, women attended
the school from eight foreign countries.
Another opportunity for international women to travel to the U.S. for
training is the Women and Politics Institute at American University,
where approximately 200 women have attended programs at their
Washington, D.C. campus in 2006, according to Associate Director Dr.
Sarah Brewer.
Women have come from Russia,
the Middle East (including Kuwait, Qatar and Afghanistan), Africa
(South Africa, Gabon, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and
Tunisia) and Asia (Japan, South Korea) to learn the tricks of the trade
from top political leaders.
In many cases,
women don't need to leave their home country to receive training. The
International Republican Institute, the National Democratic Institute,
and Women's Campaign International teach women how to become more
politically empowered in their countries by running for public office.
In a 1982 speech before the British
Parliament, President Ronald Reagan said, "Let us now begin a major
effort to secure the best -- a crusade for freedom that will engage the
faith and fortitude of the next generation. For the sake of peace and
justice, let us move toward a world in which all people are at last
free to determine their own destiny."
The
following year, in 1983, Congress created the National Endowment for
Democracy to support emerging democracies. IRI and NDI were launched
from this mandate. Both organizations send political experts to
countries to supplement in-country political training programs. And
while each group tends to highlight talent from either the Republican
or Democratic Party, their campaign training techniques are virtually
identical.
Both IRI and NDI have established
special programs within their organizations to prepare women for public
office, and train women throughout Africa, Latin America and the
Caribbean, the Middle East, Asia and Europe.
At IRI, which is chaired by U.S. Sen. John McCain, The Women's
Democracy Network was established in March 2006 in response to a
"growing interest for networking and training among women in countries
that had recently transitioned to democracy," IRI Executive
Vice-President Judy Van Rest said.
The
Network's inaugural conference coincided with International Women's Day
held on March 8, 2006, and brought more than 30 women leaders from
around the world. "Most women are just beginning to enter the political
sphere, and many continue to struggle to gain positions that will
enable them to push forward democratic reforms," Van Rest said. "WDN
works to establish regional networks and specialized training
activities for its members."
NDI's Win with
Women Global Initiative complements more than two decades of the
Institute's work with women from every region of the world. The
Initiative was launched in 2003 by NDI and its Chairwoman Madeleine K.
Albright to promote strategies for increasing women's political
leadership worldwide. The anchor of the Win with Women Global
Initiative is the Global Action Plan, a document that outlines
practical recommendations for political parties to broaden their appeal
by addressing women's role as voters, candidates, party activists and
elected officials.
"NDI helps women acquire
the tools to engage in the political process. Our programs help create
an environment in which women can
advocate on matters of policy, run for political office, be elected,
govern effectively, and participate meaningfully in every facet of
civic and political life," Kristin Haffert, the program's manager,
said.
This year, NDI worked with women in
every corner of the world, helping them change the face of politics.
The election of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf of Liberia -- Africa's first
elected female head of state -- drew attention to women's leadership in
African politics. In conjunction with Johnson Sirleaf's inauguration,
NDI organized a high-profile conference for women leaders from the
region to meet with the president and discuss women's political and
economic involvement in her country.
Inspired
by the 1995 United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing,
Women's Campaign International was founded in 1998 by Marjorie
Margolies-Mezvinsky, former Congresswoman and Emmy-award winning
journalist, and Fredrica S. Friedman, former editorial director at
Little, Brown & Company.
"WCI's
programs help women find their political voices by giving them tangible
skills in areas such as leadership, public speaking, media relations,
grass-roots organizing, campaign strategies, voter outreach and
mobilization, public speaking, policy analysis and fund raising,"
Margolies-Mezvinsky said.
To date, WCI has
conducted programs in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Namibia, Tanzania,
Romania, Venezuela, Uruguay, and the Andean Region. Currently, WCI is
conducting programs in Ethiopia, Malawi, and Afghanistan.
"When women lead, dynamics change -- silenced voices are
heard, healthy babies are born, children read, economies grow, and
families awake to new possibilities every day," Margolies-Mezvinsky
said.
Nancy Bocskor is president of the Nancy
Bocskor Company, a firm specializing in training for officeholders,
candidates and campaign workers in the U.S. and abroad. She teaches
fund raising at George Washington University's Graduate School of
Political Management. Bocskor is a member of the Board of Directors of
the Women's Campaign School at Yale, where she serves as chair of the
School's curriculum committee.
Made
possible in part by a grant from
Community
Foundation of Greater New Haven.
Additional
support provided by:
NewAlliance
Foundation